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The Order of the Tribes Of Israel
The Order of the Tribes Of Israel
By Rabbi Dr. Hillel ben David (Greg Killian)
4
16
Introduction1
A Day in the Life of a Jew1
The Twelve Sons of Jacob2
Synagogue, Study Hall and Marketplace3
The Service of the Heart3
The Partnership4
Joseph and Benyamin5
Four Motifs6
Tribes By Mother8
The Camping Order9
The Camp:10
The Tribes of Israel while marching13
The Camping Order14
Tribal Banners16
Signs (Otot)21
Mt. Eval and Mt. Gerizim25
A Working Understanding30
Tribal Census31
Breastplate Essay37
Temple Institute41
The Hebrew Months42
Nisan42
Iyar44
Sivan44
Tammuz46
Av47
Elul49
Introduction
In this study I would like to see the tribes in the order that they are listed in the scriptures. I began this quest to understand the birth order, but I found so many interesting relationships, that I expanded my area of study. Look carefully at the lists to try to discern relationships and reasoning. I have put the appropriate scriptures underneath each of the lists. I also chose to number based on birth order as defined by Bereshit (Genesis) 49. Lets start by looking at several popular lists:
I Divre Hayamim (Chronicles) 2:1-2 These were the sons of Israel: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Zebulon, Dan, Joseph, Benyamin, Naphtali, Gad, and Asher.
Revelation 7:5-8 From the tribe of Judah 12,000 were sealed, from the tribe of Reuben 12,000, from the tribe of Gad 12,000, From the tribe of Asher 12,000, from the tribe of Naphtali 12,000, from the tribe of Manasseh 12,000, From the tribe of Simeon 12,000, from the tribe of Levi 12,000, from the tribe of Issachar 12,000, From the tribe of Zebulun 12,000, from the tribe of Joseph 12,000, from the tribe of Benyamin 12,000.
Shemot (Exodus) 1:1-5 These are the names of the sons of Israel who went to Egypt with Jacob, each with his family: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah; Issachar, Zebulon and Benyamin; Dan and Naphtali; Gad and Asher. The descendants of Jacob numbered seventy in all; Joseph was already in Egypt.
A Day in the Life of a Jew[footnoteRef:1] [1: Based on the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe.]
A productive life requires an awareness of times inexorable flow and a system for time management. To this end, we consult a variety of paper or electronic grids in which the days expanse is segmented into hours and minutes and appropriately color-coded into time-allotments for work, meals, leisure and repose.
The reliance on calendar, clock and appointment book is one we share with all hour-conscious inhabitants of planet time. As Jews, however, we are also guided by a more subtle calendar, a more spiritual clock: the calendar and clock of history. As Jews, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob are as central to our concept of morning, noon, and evening as the suns arc across the sky; Adam, Moses and King David mark our year as prominently as the turning of the seasons; and the twelve sons of Jacob, progenitors of the twelve tribes of Israel, are as basic to our daily schedule as the twelve numerals etched on our clock-face or the twelve spiral-bound pages hanging on our wall.
The Twelve Sons of Jacob
Bereshit (Genesis) 30-31 order
(Their birth)
Bereshit (Genesis) 49 order
(The blessings)
I Chronicles 2 Order
Shemot (Exodus) 1 Order
(Going to Egypt)
Revelation 7 Order
(The sealing)
1. Reuben - Leah
1. Reuben - Leah
1. Reuben Leah
1. Reuben - Leah
4. Judah - Leah
2. Simeon - Leah
2. Simeon - Leah
2. Simeon Leah
2. Simeon - Leah
1. Reuben - Leah
3. Levi - Leah
3. Levi - Leah
3. Levi Leah
3. Levi - Leah
8. Gad - Zilpah
4. Judah - Leah
4. Judah - Leah
4. Judah Leah
4. Judah - Leah
9. Asher Zilpah
5. Dan - Leah
5. Zebulon - Leah
6. Issachar Leah
5. Issachar - Leah
10. Naphtali - Bilhah
6. Naphtali - Bilhah
6. Issachar - Leah
5. Zebulon Leah
6. Zebulon - Leah
Manasseh -
7. Gad - Zilpah
7. Dan - Bilhah
7. Dan Bilhah
12. Benyamin - Rachel
2. Simeon - Leah
8. Asher - Zilpah
8. Gad - Zilpah
11. Joseph Rachel
7. Dan - Bilhah
3. Levi - Leah
9. Issachar - Leah
9. Asher - Zilpah
12. Benyamin Rachel
10. Naphtali - Bilhah
6. Issachar - Leah
10. Zebulon - Bilhah
10. Naphtali - Bilhah
10. Naphtali Bilhah
8. Gad - Zilpah
5. Zebulon - Leah
11. Joseph - Rachel
11. Joseph - Rachel
8. Gad Zilpah
9. Asher - Zilpah
11. Joseph - Rachel
12. Benyamin - Rachel
12. Benyamin - Rachel
9. Asher - Zilpah
11. Joseph - Rachel
12. Benyamin - Rachel
As related in the Book of Bereshit (Genesis),[footnoteRef:2] the twelve sons of Jacob were born from four different wives and are divided into three general categories: [2: Bereshit (Genesis) 29:31-30:25; 35:16-26; 33:1-2, 6-7.]
a) The six sons of Leah -- Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun.
b) The two sons of Rachel, Jacobs primary wife and the mainstay of the house of Israel[footnoteRef:3] -- Joseph and Benyamin. [3: Midrash Rabbah, Bereshit 71:2.]
c) The four sons of the two handmaidens, Bilhah and Zilpah -- Dan, Naphtali, Gad, and Asher.
A similar division defines their roles as signposts in our daily lives:
the sons of Leah embody the activities on our daily schedule,
the sons of Rachel represent the primary modes of Jewish life, and
the sons of the handmaidens run as the auxiliary themes through our day that accompany our every action and endeavor.
Synagogue, Study Hall and Marketplace
A day in the life of a Jew begins with prayer, the service of the heart.[footnoteRef:4] The first conscious thoughts of the day, and its first uttered words, are of our awareness of HaShems presence in our lives and our indebtedness to Him for our every living breath.[footnoteRef:5] And though formal prayer must by necessity wait until one has gotten out of bed, washed, dressed, and rushed[footnoteRef:6] to the synagogue, it is the very first item on our daily agenda. In the words of the Shulchan Aruch (Code of Jewish Law), The time for reciting the morning prayers[footnoteRef:7] begins at sunrise... From the onset of the time for prayer, a person is forbidden to visit ones friend ... to attend to ones personal affairs, or to embark on a journey, before praying the morning prayers.[footnoteRef:8] [4: Deuteronomy 11:12, as per Talmud, Taanith 2a.] [5: Shulchan Aruch HaRav (earlier version), Orach Chaim 1:4-6; Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 1:2.] [6: Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 90:12.] [7: Specifically the Shema.] [8: Ibid.6, 89:1-3.]
After the morning prayers, the Jew proceeds from the synagogue to the study hall for a daily set time for Torah learning.[footnoteRef:9] From there he ventures out into the secular world to attend to his material affairs and the business of earning a living.[footnoteRef:10] [9: Ibid., 155:1, after Talmud, Berachoth 64a and Shabbat 31a.] [10: Shulchan Aruch, ibid., 156:1.]
These three activities are chronicled by the sons of Leah: Reuben, Simeon, Levi and Judah represent the various phases of prayer and its service of the heart; Issachar represents the study of Torah; and Zebulun represents the Jews foray into the marketplace.
The Service of the Heart
Prayer is a ladder set upon the earth whose head touches the heavens.[footnoteRef:11] This ladder consists of four rungs -- Reuben, Simeon, Levi and Judah; or love, awe, integration and self-abnegation. [11: Bereshit (Genesis) 28:12; cf. Zohar, part I, 266b; Midrash Rabbah, Bereshit 68:12.]
The heart of man is home to hundreds, if not thousands, of identifiable emotions. But in a most general sense, we recognize two primary drives: the impulse to approach and come near, and the impulse to recoil and withdraw. To the first category belong such emotions as love, yearning, and kindness; to the second category, feelings such as awe, fear, reverence, and humility.
The repertoire of the heart also includes emotions that combine both these motions of self. A mature emotional relationship will include feelings that are both loving and revering, feelings that integrate a striving for closeness with a restraining awe.
Indeed, such a synthesis of love and awe is the hearts highest form of emotional expression. But an even greater achievement of the heart is the negation of emotion. For all emotions, whether of the self-extending, self-contracting or integrating sort, are a form of self-expression; and to truly relate to someone or something that lies beyond the self, one must divest oneself of every vestige of self-interest and self-regard.
These are the four rungs in the ladder of prayer. In the first phase of the service of the heart (which culminates in the first section of the Shema), the objective is to develop a feeling of love towards HaShem, a yearning and craving to draw close to Him. The second phase (coinciding with the second section of the Shema) is the development of feelings of reverence and awe toward HaShem. The third phase (associated with the blessing True and Enduring, recited between the Shema and the Amida) is the fusion of love and awe in our relationship with HaShem. In the fourth phase (attained during the silen